
gstammw at gmx
Apr 20, 2003, 6:30 AM
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Hello Tom, It is an interesting question how much traffic the box can handle. During normal operations I'd say that 500 Mbits/sec should be possible, but the even more interesting question would be how much PACKETS PER SECOND the box can handle ? We've got the problem that our linux-boxes are freezing when an attack with let's say only 40 megabits but hundreds of connections or packets per second are incoming. Maybe there's something wrong with our kernel and/or TCP-Settings. Is there someone on the list who can tell me how to opzimize the linux kernel and especially the tcp-settings in /proc ?? Maybe the ZNOG-group can help - I've cross-posted the message, so please reply on nanog or via pm. Happy easter, Gunther -----Ursprüngliche Nachricht----- Von: owner-nanog [at] merit [mailto:owner-nanog [at] merit] Im Auftrag von Tom Daly Gesendet: Sonntag, 20. April 2003 07:59 An: nanog [at] merit Betreff: Zebra Router??? Hi All, I'm trying to find out what peoples experiences regarding the throughput of Zebra on a FreeBSD Box. My configuration is as follows: Intel Pentium III 1.40G 1 Gig RAM 2x <Intel Pro 10/100B/100+ Ethernet> (one internal, one external) on board. This box is running as a simple static router, i.e. one subnet on the inside, Internet feed on the other side. No BGP, no RIP, no OSPF. Pretty simple, eh? So the goal is to know the bandwidth limitation of this router. Any ideas? I've heard numbers of 35Meg, 40 Meg, etc, however, I have not recieved a good reason backing it up. Can anyone offer some input on this? Regards, Tom Daly -- Tom Daly tom [at] dyndns Chief Infrastructure Officer Dynamic DNS Network Services http://www.dyndns.org/
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